Memory summary: In the handicrafts clubroom, Shu and Kagehira are working on their respective sewing projects. Shu notices Kagehira is depressed while Kagehira doesn't respond, annoying Shu. Shu tries to figure out if it's because Kagehira hasn't accepted that he's going abroad, out of the boundaries from where Tenshouin can reach him— he is done being tied down by his past and nightmares. He thanks Kagehira for staying by his side and getting him back on his feet, and gives him permission to live his own life now.
Kagehira insists he's Shu's doll. He gets angrier as he speaks, full of vitriol for humanity, "In fiction, humans’re usually the most amazin’, the most precious things.
So it feels weird t’see humans die as the worthless trash they are, like in a horror movie, right?
But that’s how it is in reality. I don’t think of humans as some magnificent thing I should be aimin’ t’become.
There're parents out there who beat their children an' throw 'em away, an' on the contrary, children who kill their parents for trivial reasons. Stuff like that's all we do; there ain't a single completely pure human out there. "
But dolls are always good. He accuses Shu of wanting him to be a human tantamount to throwing him away. Shu rebukes this, saying he's been taking advantage of Kagehira, but now he wants him to be happy even if he's off-base right now. He wants to understand Kagehira.
Memory 8/12
Memory summary: In the handicrafts clubroom, Shu and Kagehira are working on their respective sewing projects. Shu notices Kagehira is depressed while Kagehira doesn't respond, annoying Shu. Shu tries to figure out if it's because Kagehira hasn't accepted that he's going abroad, out of the boundaries from where Tenshouin can reach him— he is done being tied down by his past and nightmares. He thanks Kagehira for staying by his side and getting him back on his feet, and gives him permission to live his own life now.
Kagehira insists he's Shu's doll. He gets angrier as he speaks, full of vitriol for humanity, "In fiction, humans’re usually the most amazin’, the most precious things.
So it feels weird t’see humans die as the worthless trash they are, like in a horror movie, right?
But that’s how it is in reality. I don’t think of humans as some magnificent thing I should be aimin’ t’become.
There're parents out there who beat their children an' throw 'em away, an' on the contrary, children who kill their parents for trivial reasons. Stuff like that's all we do; there ain't a single completely pure human out there. "
But dolls are always good. He accuses Shu of wanting him to be a human tantamount to throwing him away. Shu rebukes this, saying he's been taking advantage of Kagehira, but now he wants him to be happy even if he's off-base right now. He wants to understand Kagehira.
Kagehira leaves in response.